An impact goal does not describe what you will do. It describes what will change. That is the difference between “run ten workshops” and “help participants find durable employment.”
Most goals we set are really activity goals. They measure effort, not result. An impact goal keeps its eyes on the change you are after.
Why confusing activity and impact is costly
You hit the goal and change nothing
You can complete every planned activity and still produce no real change. The activity goal is met; the impact is zero. It is the most common trap.
You measure what is easy, not what matters
Activities are simple to count; change is harder to capture. For convenience, people set goals on what counts easily and forget the purpose.
An impact goal starts from the change
In my framework, impact — the fourth pillar — is what actually changes because of your work. So an impact goal states that change first: for whom, and how their situation will be different. The activity comes after, as a means to that end, never the reverse.
What impact measurement taught me
At the Miller Center for Social Entrepreneurship, I built measurement frameworks and monitoring and evaluation plans. The work always began with the same question: what change are we trying to produce? A well-set impact goal flows directly from that answer, and then dictates what to measure.
How to set impact goals
State the change, not the action
Frame the goal as a result for someone: “so that X is able to…” rather than “to do Y.” The verb should describe a change, not a task.
Make it honestly measurable
Attach an impact indicator — one that measures what changes, not the activity — and a before-and-after comparison.
Connect it to a credible logic
Check that your activities can plausibly produce that change. That is the role of a theory of change: linking what you do to the impact you intend.
Stay modest and verifiable
A modest, real impact goal beats an ambitious, unverifiable promise. Credibility comes from honesty, not from the scale you announce.
What’s next?
Setting impact goals is the starting point of any serious measurement — the core of the fourth pillar. These goals rest on a theory of change and are tracked with impact indicators.
To see how Impact connects with Intention, Continuity, and Mastery, start with the method.
Next step: Read the Method → — or see the difference between output and outcome.
FAQ
What is the difference between an activity goal and an impact goal?
An activity goal describes what you will do (organize, produce, deliver). An impact goal describes what will change for someone. The first measures effort; the second measures result.
Can individuals set impact goals?
Yes. Even for a personal project, you can state the intended change for a beneficiary and choose a simple indicator. The scale changes; the logic holds.
How do I set an impact goal when the change takes years?
Define measurable short-term outcomes that plausibly lead to the long-term impact. You then track the trajectory without waiting years to know whether you are progressing.



